Polytopological space

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In general topology, a polytopological space consists of a set X together with a family {τi}iI of topologies on X that is linearly ordered by the inclusion relation where I is an arbitrary index set. It is usually assumed that the topologies are in non-decreasing order.[1][2] However some authors prefer the associated closure operators {ki}iI to be in non-decreasing order where kikj if and only if kiAkjA for all AX. This requires non-increasing topologies.[3]

Formal definitions

An L-topological space (X,τ) is a set X together with a monotone map τ:L Top(X) where (L,) is a partially ordered set and Top(X) is the set of all possible topologies on X, ordered by inclusion. When the partial order is a linear order then (X,τ) is called a polytopological space. Taking L to be the ordinal number n={0,1,,n1}, an n-topological space (X,τ0,,τn1) can be thought of as a set X with topologies τ0τn1 on it. More generally a multitopological space (X,τ) is a set X together with an arbitrary family τ of topologies on it.[2]

History

Polytopological spaces were introduced in 2008 by the philosopher Thomas Icard for the purpose of defining a topological model of Japaridze's polymodal logic (GLP).[1] They were later used to generalize variants of Kuratowski's closure-complement problem.[2][3] For example Taras Banakh et al. proved that under operator composition the n closure operators and complement operator on an arbitrary n-topological space can together generate at most 2K(n) distinct operators[2] where K(n)=i,j=0n(i+ji)(i+jj).In 1965 the Finnish logician Jaakko Hintikka found this bound for the case n=2 and claimed[4] it "does not appear to obey any very simple law as a function of n".

See also

References

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